6533b832fe1ef96bd129af30

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Implications of Overlapping Difficulties in Mathematics and Reading on Self-Concept and Academic Achievement

Leena HolopainenAiri TaipaleHannu Savolainen

subject

Health (social science)oppiminenmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationSelf-conceptreading difficultyAcademic achievementSpecial educationmathematical difficultyHealth Professions (miscellaneous)EducationDevelopmental psychologyComprehensive schoolReading (process)Developmental and Educational Psychologymedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesta516media_commonspecial educationlearningGroup (mathematics)05 social sciences050301 educationacademic achievementLearning disabilityFinnish education systemmedicine.symptomacademic self-conceptcluster analysesPsychology0503 educationReading skills050104 developmental & child psychology

description

In this study, the relationship between adolescents’ difficulty in mathematics and reading and the influence on academic self-concept and school grades was examined. The participants (N = 585; 299 girls, 286 boys) were one age group of ninth-graders whose mathematics and reading skills were assessed at the end of comprehensive school at age 16 years. Five student profile groups were found using cluster analysis: best achievers, normal achievers (NA), the reading difficulty (RD) group, the mathematical difficulty (MD) group, and the learning difficulty (LD) group. Post-hoc tests revealed that the RD group and the LD group had a higher academic self-concept than the MD group. In school grades history, surprisingly, the NA group and the RD group performed equally well across all school grades. Students in the MD group performed as poorly as the LD group. The results emphasise the prolonged and generalised effects of especially MD on students’ academic careers. peerReviewed

10.1080/1034912x.2016.1181257http://juuli.fi/Record/0285283517